Dempsey Arsenault would do just about anything to extend Boston College’s season to another NCAA tournament championship game and to extend her career.
That do-anything attitude is what landed the senior midfielder on defense in her first two seasons with the Eagles.
“Whatever it took to get on the field,” Arsenault said. “The first two years, it was low defense, and I was totally OK with that. I always thought of myself as a more defensive-minded player, and so I loved that role.”
Arsenault has flipped the last two years into the midfield and still flashes her defensive skills, but Boston College has encouraged her to hone her offensive prowess.
“I love offense and I love being able to run the midfield, so while I do miss that defensive position, I kind of like my position now more,” Arsenault said. “It’s way more fun.”
Arsenault has undergone a transformation over her college career to play uniquely well in two distinctively different roles. In her first two seasons, she sometimes marked the other team’s top offensive threat as a defender. Arsenault was a freshman when she held Syracuse standout Kayla Treanor — now coincidentally a BC assistant coach — to a season-low two points. She’s evolved into a midfielder that last two season, and this year she has 61 goals, 26 assists, 93 draw controls and 17 caused turnovers on her way to being named a Tewaaraton Award finalist.
“It’s totally hard and close to impossible, but Dempsey is a freak athlete,” BC head coach Acacia Walker-Weinstein said. “Any good midfielder spends their time early in their career prioritizing defense. And Dempsey did a great job of that. Over the course of her career, knowing her athletic potential, we slowly pushed her to think more offensively.”